Completion of Loktak phumdi clearance likely by Feb, 2015 Devendra

The government is targeting to complete clearance of phumdi from Loktak Lake by February, 2015 and so far around Rs 180 crores has been spent, Forest Environment Minister Th Devendra informed the State Assembly today Source Hueiyen News Service

The government is targeting to complete clearance of phumdi from Loktak Lake by February, 2015 and so far around Rs 180 crores has been spent, Forest Environment Minister Th Devendra informed the State Assembly today Source Hueiyen News Service

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Ukhrul protests

Rejecting to Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam’s claim on the present situation of Ukhrul district head quarters, a large number of womenfolk staged a sit in protest in front of TSL office, Wino Bazar, Ukhrul today Source The Sangai Express

Rejecting to Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam’s claim on the present situation of Ukhrul district head quarters, a large number of womenfolk staged a sit in protest in front of TSL office, Wino Bazar, Ukhrul today Source The Sangai Express

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Delhi unsafe city for NE people MLA K Shyam

Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam, who is also the Home Minister, informed the State Assembly that Delhi Police have arrested three persons involved in the killing of a youth from Senapati district identified as Salouni, who was beaten to death in South…

Deputy Chief Minister Gaikhangam, who is also the Home Minister, informed the State Assembly that Delhi Police have arrested three persons involved in the killing of a youth from Senapati district identified as Salouni, who was beaten to death in South Delhi’s Mubarakpur by a group of people coming in a Maruti car in the wee hours of July 21 and that investigation into the case is going on Source Hueiyen News Service

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CM furious over Min Nasir’s remarks on not reading newspaper

In a surprise manner, Agriculture Minister Md Abdul Nasir while responding to queries raised by House Members on issues related to agriculture stated that he has stopped reading newspapers for the last 2 3 months after he came across certain incorrect …

In a surprise manner, Agriculture Minister Md Abdul Nasir while responding to queries raised by House Members on issues related to agriculture stated that he has stopped reading newspapers for the last 2 3 months after he came across certain incorrect news related to him published in newspapers Source Hueiyen News Service

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CM denies interference by Judiciary

Chief Mini ster Okram Ibobi has cate gorically stated that there is no case of the Judiciary interfering into the functions and works of either the Legislature or the Executive Source The Sangai Express

Chief Mini ster Okram Ibobi has cate gorically stated that there is no case of the Judiciary interfering into the functions and works of either the Legislature or the Executive Source The Sangai Express

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Candle light vigil in memory of Salouni

Around 1000 people which included students, leaders of civil societies, women organizations, religious leaders and businessmen gathered at Traffic point, Senapati Bazaar an staged a candle light vigil to show their solidarity to the bereaved families o…

Around 1000 people which included students, leaders of civil societies, women organizations, religious leaders and businessmen gathered at Traffic point, Senapati Bazaar an staged a candle light vigil to show their solidarity to the bereaved families of Late K Source Hueiyen News Service

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Soso Lorho petitions against Baite, ECI, CEO, MPCC

Soso Lorho, who contested the recent Lok Sabha polls from Outer Manipur Constituency on Naga People’s Front NPF ticket, has filed a petition against MP Outer Thangso Baite, ECI, CEO Manipur and MPCC in the High Court of Manipur Source The Sang…

Soso Lorho, who contested the recent Lok Sabha polls from Outer Manipur Constituency on Naga People’s Front NPF ticket, has filed a petition against MP Outer Thangso Baite, ECI, CEO Manipur and MPCC in the High Court of Manipur Source The Sangai Express Newmai News Network

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Fallout of militancy Williamnagar residents find renting houses difficult in Tura

Militancy has become synonymous with the Garo Hills region with East Garo Hills EGH quickly being known as the hub of militant activity Source Hueiyen News Service Newmai News Network

Militancy has become synonymous with the Garo Hills region with East Garo Hills EGH quickly being known as the hub of militant activity Source Hueiyen News Service Newmai News Network

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KSO calls for unity against racial attack

Kuki Students Organisation KSO General Headquarters has strongly condemned the murder of Shaloni Akha at Kotla Mubarakpur in Delhi in the wee hours of July 21 Source Hueiyen News Service NNN

Kuki Students Organisation KSO General Headquarters has strongly condemned the murder of Shaloni Akha at Kotla Mubarakpur in Delhi in the wee hours of July 21 Source Hueiyen News Service NNN

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SIT to probe Manipur youth’s death Govt

Government today said a Special Investigation Team has been constituted to inves tigate the death of Manipuri youth Akha Salouni in Delhi Source The Sangai Express Press Trust of India

Government today said a Special Investigation Team has been constituted to inves tigate the death of Manipuri youth Akha Salouni in Delhi Source The Sangai Express Press Trust of India

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NPO expresses concern

Naga People’s Organization NPO today stated that despite repeated assurance in different occasion by Chief Minister and others to install the much awaited additional 5MVA power transformer at Karong power station, nothing has been done so far Sourc…

Naga People’s Organization NPO today stated that despite repeated assurance in different occasion by Chief Minister and others to install the much awaited additional 5MVA power transformer at Karong power station, nothing has been done so far Source The Sangai Express

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MHA studying Bezbaruah report

The Home Ministry is studying the report of MP Bezbaruah committee, set up to look into concerns of people from the Northeast living in different parts of the country, Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju said today Source The Sangai Express Pr…

The Home Ministry is studying the report of MP Bezbaruah committee, set up to look into concerns of people from the Northeast living in different parts of the country, Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju said today Source The Sangai Express Press Trust of India

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Protest meet calls for reviewing Mapithel dam construction

As part of the Global Days of Action for Development Justice to demand a just sustainable development in a post 2015, Mapithel Dam Affected Villagers Organization in collaboration with Citizens Concern for Dams and Development and Centre for Research a…

As part of the Global Days of Action for Development Justice to demand a just sustainable development in a post 2015, Mapithel Dam Affected Villagers Organization in collaboration with Citizens Concern for Dams and Development and Centre for Research and Advocacy, Manipur organised a protest meet against continuing injustice by the ongoing construction of Mapithel dam at Riha Village in Ukhrul District today Source Hueiyen News Service

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SIT to probe Manipur youth’s death: Government – indiatvnews.com

indiatvnews.comSIT to probe Manipur youth's death: Governmentindiatvnews.comNew Delhi: Government today said a Special Investigation Team has been constituted to investigate the death of Manipuri youth Akha Salouni in Delhi. Making a statement in L…


indiatvnews.com

SIT to probe Manipur youth's death: Government
indiatvnews.com
New Delhi: Government today said a Special Investigation Team has been constituted to investigate the death of Manipuri youth Akha Salouni in Delhi. Making a statement in Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju termed as “shocking and …

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Cauldron of Pretensions, Confusions and Opportunisms for, By the North East and Of the North East

By Amar Yumnam This is the moment necessitating extreme introspection, sublime efforts for contextual understanding, and freeing from the routine approaches for appreciating the social issues and addressing the transformation

By Amar Yumnam

This is the moment necessitating extreme introspection, sublime efforts for contextual understanding, and freeing from the routine approaches for appreciating the social issues and addressing the transformation problems by the people of the North East for the land and people of the North East India by the people from anywhere. The North East is now in a renewed focus, and the new government at the Centre shows signs of endeavouring to appreciate the region with the specific characteristics of each unit within national and international frameworks of existence. This being so, we cannot afford to allow this new effort to get derailed by a few opportunists from within and without the region. The two decades of the so-called Look East Policy without any body and soul put into the policy have already caused social havoc, unhealthy economic tussles and dangerous political turmoil; these should not be allowed to get accentuated further.

I have just read a cartoon in the Manipuri edition of The Sangai Express. I was shocked by the shallowness, absence of ethics and poverty of knowledge of the cartoonist. One may know how to draw cartoons, but that does not necessarily qualify one to be a cartoonist in a newspaper; sarcasms have a place but should not be a reflection of personal unfulfilled wishes. I happen to experience the poverty of quality of this cartoonist on a day just back home after attending a workshop on the economic corridor linking Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar with a feeling of enhanced responsibility for the people from this region; the cartoon has been so depressingly and degradingly captioned. While the theme of the workshop on the economic corridor was good, we have reasons to be extremely cautious of the ways things have happened in India so far. In the workshop there were ample display of narcissism of routine and conventional understanding of the issues of the region by people from within as well as from outside the region. The people from outside the region have been trying to look at the region from the framework they are familiar with and not from a framework alive to the realities of the region. In other words, the individuals from outside the region have been trying to impose themselves and carve a place for themselves in the renewed focus on North East India. The Indian pretensions come in full display here. While behaving like experts, the Indian style has been purely on mechanical understanding of the issues and regions, the developed and civilised way being practised in the US, Europe, and Japan, and recently in Thailand and China is founded on intense efforts to move beyond routinized understanding through contextualised efforts. What is even more painful is that quite many bureaucrats and technocrats, who have crossed their prime, are also trying hard to place themselves in the centre of articulation of issues and framing policy interventions for the region; the relevance of these people today are at best close to zero as they were never exposed to contextualised understanding of the milieu of issues and interventions.

This is exactly where the people in the region have an important onus on themselves today. We have to be doubly careful such that these two kinds of people do not snatch the agenda of the North East and establish themselves as pivots of policy making for the region of the region. We cannot allow “the German-Jewish intellectual Walter Benjamin’s famous vision of history as a vast heap of wreckage of incidents and events that keeps piling higher and higher into infinity, with progress signifying merely more wreckage waiting to happen” to prevail anymore in the region. What we want in the region is a kind of development fully alive to the social, cultural, demographic, political, economic and environmental realities of the region. One of the top 100 global thinkers of the world, Robert D. Kaplan has written of his feelings in his just published book Asia’s Cauldron: South China Sea and The End of a Stable Pacific thus: “A boom town of oil and gas revenue erupts out of the compressed greenery; coloured glass and roaring steel curves define buildings that are like rocket launch pads located near lakes the hue of algae and mud. I sip a pink cocktail beside a brightly lit rooftop swimming pool at night – glowing balloons float at the surface – and look out at the cityscape. The comic book futurism of Batman and Gotham City comes to mind. Palm trees crowd in on overpasses. Despite the unceasing stacks of high-rises, there is a naked, waiting-to-be-filled-in quality to the landscape of spiky blue-green mountains and coiling rivers: where a hundred years ago tin and rubber were beginning to be extracted in large amounts. This was a time when the capital of Kuala Lumpur was little more than the “muddy confluence” for which it is named. An archipelago of trading posts and river outlets, Malaysia and the Malay world are supposed to conjure up the short stories of W. Somerset Maugham. They don’t anymore. Maugham’s vast sprawl of uninterrupted, sweaty jungle, with its intimate and heartrending family dramas played out in colonial plantations, is long gone. And there is an oppressive fecundity in everything I see.” This definitely is not the kind of development which we should be visualising for the North East in the decades following today.

There are some things which should be core of our understanding of the region. Right from Bangladesh to China through the North East was a continuum geographically, socially, culturally, and economically though these were disrupted by the partition, independence and mergers after the Second World War. Any talk of linkages and collaboration among these should be seen as rather re-establishing the continuum rather than establishing contacts in an otherwise absolutely strange entities. Here the borders are not the militaristic understanding as boundaries. Borders here are geographical, cultural, demographical and economic continuums. The landscape, the seascape and the mountain scape in these areas should be appropriately appreciated and evolve policies accordingly in a holistic way and not in stand-alone approaches any more. Viva la difference and let this be the fountain and beauty of the new development connections

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/cauldron-of-pretensions-confusions-and-opportunisms-for-by-the-north-east-and-of-the-north-east/

On A Slippery Slope

By B.G. Verghese The Government seems to be on a slippery slope while the Congress appears to be slipping into a mood of frustrated irresponsibility. The Prime Minister has had

By B.G. Verghese

The Government seems to be on a slippery slope while the Congress appears to be slipping into a mood of frustrated irresponsibility. The Prime Minister has had a routinely successful tour abroad, visiting Brazil for a useful BRICS meeting. But he left without naming a Number 2 (Why?) which appears to have robbed the Government of initiative. It was unable to make an appropriate response to the violence in Gaza that has taken over300 lives which Israel claims is in response to kidnappings and rocket attacks by Hamas.

To argue that we have considerable stakes both in Israel and the Arab world and should therefore say nothing that will irritate either is to beg the question. For spokespersons to argue that there was silence when Hamas fired rockets into Israel cannot justify silence when Israel brutally bombs and invades Gaza. Neither act of violence is justified. Sitting on the fence on the basis of an uncritical friendship suggests a bankruptcy of policy. We do expect the world to react when external violence and terror strikes India. If so, can we remain silent when other innocents bleed?

People and nations respect responsible and principled reactions by friendly powers. This also gives us leverage to intervene where possible through quiet diplomacy. The fact is, however, that we have denied ourselves any meaningful role in West Asia.

And now a Malaysian airliner has been shot down over Ukraine, killing 295 persons. Should we not take a view on the Russian-Ukranian standoff that seems to have brought on this latest horror and counsel our friends.

The hysteria over the Vaidik caper in Lahore has not yet subsided and has distracted attention from a more insidious threat. This is the RSS-Parivar push to commit the Government to saffron policies. The PM has been silent or will be assumed to be acquiescent despite his comforting words to all minorities and political opponents on assuming office.

The “loan” of RSS stalwarts to the BJP Government and attacks on Christians are symptomatic of a different voice. And now the menace in Ashok Singhal’s rant against Muslims to DNA last week: “Muslims will be treated as common citizens — nothing more, nothing less. And, they must learn to respect Hindu sentiments. If they keep opposing Hindus, how long can they survive?” He also said that Muslims should withdraw claims in regard to the Ayodhya, Kashi and Mathura temple sites and also accept a uniform civil code. These are unilateral threats and diktats, pushing the Hindutva agenda like a uniform civil code without only movement towards implementing this most important legislation.

As worrying is the appointment of Prof. Y Sudarshan Rao as Chairman of the Indian Council of Historical Research. Leading scholars describe him as an obscure historian from Andhra without any acclaimed book or peer reviewed article to his credit. His principal work and interest appears to be trying to date the Ramayana and Mahabhrata and fit them into historical time so as convert what most consider legends, put together at different times by different authors in varying versions, into lived history. Once done, this would reinforce the case for the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya. This clearly is a political project and not innocent historical research.

Prof Rao’s view is that ancient Indian history has been viewed through foreign and Marxist lenses and has been greatly influenced by Western historiography. What he seeks is “to evolve a methodology to study our remote past with an Indian perspective”. Critics fear Prof Rao is merging history with mythology.

Let every kind of research go on, but it would be a disaster to return to any project to saffronise education in the manner witnessed in the last NDA regime and in the books produced by the Parivar for their Shishu Mandirs. Those have glorified Hindu Rashtra, and treated minorities as second class citizens and dalits with contempt. These are mirror images of distorted Pakistan’s poisonous, divisive and fictional textbooks. Some young, educated Muslim Indians are being ideologically called to radicalism; but others despair at aspects of the Muslim condition in India.

We need to be wary of antagonising any section of the population through chauvinistic nationalism in a highly plural society. Hindutvadis are a minority in Hindu society whose genius has been tolerance and accommodation. India will never go their bigoted way.

The BJP has also got it wrong in rejecting for the second time a nominee for elevation as an apex court judge recommended by the Supreme Court collegium. The Court has stood firm and the Government should properly yield ground. Any effort to pack the courts will be firmly resisted. The Government has done well to sanction 250 more high court judges to expedite cases and cut down arrears. But these justices must be chosen with care and not packed with loyalists.

Our laws must move with the times and there is a good case for permitting passive euthanasia if cleared by a medical board. But there seems to be some backsliding on this. The right to life is incomplete unless what is guaranteed is a right to life with dignity which is also a high constitutional value. Punishing a comatose individual reduced to a vegetable and his/her family is cruel. Murder must be precluded; but protection of life must rise above a life without hope or purpose.

At the same time there is cause to review the law on rape by juveniles. Cases of juvenile rape have been alarmingly on the rise. While the victim has suffered horrible violence, indignity and, sometimes, torture and ultimate death, victims have got off lightly, pleading age. The notion behind juvenile justice is immaturity of the violator and opportunity for reform. But Maneka Gandhi has powerfully pleaded that this be reconsidered and the age of immunity be reduced to 16. This is worthy of consideration in the “rarest of rare” cases.

Only fear of the law and its swift execution will ensure compliance. Today, few fear the law. Punishment is waived. Criminals of every kind are emboldened.

Nowhere is this more so than in the case of politicians whose brazen lawlessness is becoming an epidemic. Ashok Chavan, former Maharashtra chief minister, has been defending himself against a charge of paid news in the 2009 polls. Prime facie, the evidence was clear. But we live in an age when BMWs can magically become trucks when it comes to rash driving.

www. bgverghese.com

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/on-a-slippery-slope/

In Mood of Development

Chief Minister O Ibobi’s inauguration spree of some of the important public infrastructures in two different districts on a single day neatly captures the development mood that his government has

Chief Minister O Ibobi’s inauguration spree of some of the important public infrastructures in two different districts on a single day neatly captures the development mood that his government has been drumming up in the State for quite some time. Taking out time from the hectic Assembly Session, the CM has made a statement by reaching out to the two districts of Churachandpur and Bishnupur on a single day, that his government is concern about development. It definitely takes us down the memory lane of another inauguration spree that took place in 2011. This was when the United Progressive Alliance was in its second term of power in Delhi. The then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi came to Imphal in December 2011 to inaugurate the City Convention Center, the State Assembly Complex and the Manipur Film Development Corporation auditorium, all hurriedly on a single day. And of course, the Inter State Bus Terminus near Khuman Lampak, was also inaugurated on the same day by the same visitors. A remote control device was used while inaugurating it, showcasing the State’s technological progress. Ever since, this ISBT has been in the public limelight, capturing front page spaces with photographs of its premises dotted with human excreta. The City Convention Center after almost three years of its inauguration bears no sign of completion even today, except for its well decorated façade standing tall and forlornly. MFDC auditorium which is just across the City Convention has a different picture. The auditorium is equipped with one of the best setups with digital surround sound, hi-tech projector and other modern gadgets. Truly, this is one of the public structures we are proud of. However, this costly infrastructure has been running with inadequate staff. There is need for inducting more workforces for the infrastructure to thrive. The same is true for the newborn Chandrakirti Auditorium at the Palace Compound. It is learned that paucity of fund has been one of the chief reasons for not recruiting adequate staffs. Registered that the financial climate may not be favorable on the Government’s part for recruiting staff, as evident with the current ban on recruitment; but our contestation is that the purpose for building such infrastructures is hardly served unless there are enough people to look after them. Agreed, the present government must be given credit for such infrastructural achievements of public worth. But what is appalling is leaving the structures alone to its own fate. Before embarking upon such costly projects, the government must also take into cognizance of the simple fact that an infrastructure needs maintenance for it to survive. The same logic applies to any infrastructure whether it is new or old. The CM while inaugurating the newly constructed block of the Churachandpur District hospital assured that his government would set up a Hills Medical College in the district. The announcement is certainly welcome. We have been maintaining in this column that health care facilities should be upgraded and expanded to each and every district of the State, rather than concentrating in the Imphal areas. What is unhinging is that without enough manpower, physical infrastructure alone cannot look after the patients. The Senapati District hospital even after inauguration of its new building is not fully functional because of lack of staff. If this kind of development represents the real mood of development, then it is a retarded development.

Leader Writer: Senate Kh.

 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2014/07/in-mood-of-development/